Afridi, 32, managed just 28 runs in four innings and his three wickets were taken at an expensive average of 48.66 as Pakistan slumped to a 3-1 defeat with one match abandoned due to rain in the series, which ended on Monday. "Our performance was not as such as we were expecting," Afridi told AFP. "Now I want to consult my elders and then decide on my one-day future. I will have to sincerely review where I stand as far as my performance is concerned."
Afridi, who holds the record of smashing the fastest one-day hundred -- off 37 balls against Sri Lanka in Nairobi in 1996 -- has not been on the best of form with the bat and has not bowled to the standard he set as a leg-spinner. He has played 347 one day internationals for Pakistan, scoring 7,068 runs and taking 347 wickets.
But he managed just three wickets in Pakistan's 4-1 defeat against England in February this year. He said Pakistan needs to build a strong team for the 2015 World Cup, to be jointly hosted by Australia and New Zealand.
"I will make a decision soon but I have yet to decide on retirement. I will continue playing Twenty20 cricket if I leave one-day. I want to leave the stage for youngsters so that Pakistan can have a good team by 2015," said Afridi, who retired from Test cricket in 2010.
Highlighting Pakistan's fielding as one reason for the loss to Sri Lanka, he said: "Sri Lanka used their conditions very well and they are a strong team in their conditions, so they fared better than us. "We lost mainly because of poor fielding. This has been our weakness ever since I started playing cricket, so we need to overcome that problem."
Afridi had an eventful last year, guiding Pakistan to the World Cup semi-final before falling out with then Pakistan Cricket Board chairman Ijaz Butt after being removed as one-day captain. In protest he announced retirement from all cricket but rescinded his decision after Butt was replaced by Zaka Ashraf as PCB chairman in October.






